The incidence of "mood switching" (defined as development of mixed episodes, mania, or hypomania according to DSM-IV criteria) do not differ significantly between escitalopram and placebo in either the acute or the continuation phases.

Patients: In- and outpatients receiving care in the specialised psychiatric services of Western Norway. The population is intended to be representative of the patients treated for bipolar depression in ordinary specialist care. Patients must have a MADRS score of at least 20 at baseline. Patients with ongoing substance abuse or dependence, organic mental illness, and non-affective psychotic symptoms are excluded.

Medication: Escitalopram 10-20 mg daily or placebo in addition to mood stabilisers. The dose of mood stabilisers must have been constant for the last six weeks prior to randomisation.

Method: Phase 1 is a eight-week acute treatment trial with six clinical assessments. Patients treated with escitalopram who have not responded after eight weeks (defined by at least 50% reduction of MADRS score compared to baseline) leave the study. Placebo non-responders are treated openly with escitalopram and repeat phase 1. Responders are re-randomised to 32 weeks of maintenance treatment (phase 2). Phase 2 has nine clinical assessments. Patients who develop hypomania, mania or depressive episodes (defined as episodes meeting DSM-IV criteria for Major Depressive Episode with MADRS scores of at least 20 points) leave the study in this phase. Patients leaving the study prematurely will be offered alternative treatment.

To compare the efficacy and the risk of "mood switching" of escitalopram and placebo in the acute phase treatment of bipolar depression in patients already taking mood stabilising medication.

To compare the efficacy of escitalopram and placebo in continuation phase therapy for bipolar depression using a placebo-controlled discontinuation design. The study will compare the occurrence of syndromal and subsyndromal relapses, mixed states, mania, hypomania, and "rapid cycling" in a seven months' maintenance study following response to acute phase treatment.

Hypotheses

Escitalopram, given in addition to mood stabilising medications, is significantly more efficacious, measured by response and remission rates than placebo in bipolar depression (the acute phase study).

The incidence of "mood switching" (defined as development of mixed episodes, mania, or hypomania according to DSM-IV criteria do not differ significantly between escitalopram and placebo in either the acute or the continuation phases.

Design This is a multi-center RCT with parallel-group design. The study compares the efficacy of placebo and escitalopram, given as add-on to mood stabilising medications in patients with bipolar depression without non-affective psychotic symptoms according to DSM-IV, and with a baseline MADRS score of ≥ 20 points.

The study has two phases. The acute phase study lasts for eight weeks and compares the efficacy of escitalopram and placebo on depressive symptoms in bipolar depression. Response is defined as at least 50% improvement on the MADRS compared to the baseline score. Responders to escitalopram are re-randomised to escitalopram or placebo for the continuation phase while placebo responders continue taking placebo for the continuation phase. Patients on escitalopram who do not respond in the acute phase leave the study, whereas placebo non-responders are treated openly with escitalopram and repeat phase 1. Responders to this open-label treatment are then re-randomised double blind to escitalopram or placebo for the continuation study.

The continuation phase study lasts for 32 weeks. Patients who responded to placebo in the acute phase continue placebo and their usual mood stabilising medication for the remainder of the study. Those who responded to escitalopram are re-randomised to continue taking placebo or escitalopram in unchanged doses. Patients who develop new mood episodes (DSM-IV-defined major depressive episode, mania, hypomania, or mixed episodes) or MADRS score ≥ 20 points leave the study.

Method Screening includes sociodemographic variables, medical and psychiatric history, diagnosis made on the basis of clinical interview and verified by the MINI, symptom intensity measured by the MADRS,), results of medical examination and laboratory tests (ECG, height, weight, blood pressure and blood tests). Sociodemographic variables include age, gender, previous and concomitant disorders, course and treatment of mental disorders, bipolar disorder type (I or II), age of onset and history of psychotropic medication use.

Study procedure As soon as the blood samples are analysed, eligible patients can be randomised. They are rated on the MADRS, Clinical Global Impressions (CGI), Inventory of Depressive Symptoms - Self Report (IDS-SR), Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 12 (SF-12), Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) and Sheehan Disability Inventory (SDI) at the baseline visit. Study medication is dispensed. The patients will return to further visits as shown below. Patients will receive study medication for a maximum of 40 weeks. Adverse events and concomitant medications are recorded.

For the acute study, response and remission rates as assessed by the MADRS are the primary outcome measures. CGI-Improvement and IDS-SR are secondary outcome measures. In the continuation study, primary outcome measures include emergence of major depressive episodes and mania/hypomania, while time spent at different depressive symptom levels as assessed by the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria are secondary outcome measures.

Definitions Response: at least a 50% reduction of the baseline MADRS score at the end of phase 1 if the patient has completed at least four weeks of the study. CGI-I 1 or 2 at the end of phase 1.

Remission: MADRS score of 12 or less at the end of the acute phase if the patient has completed at least four weeks of the study.

New episode: A patient who has previously responded to treatment meets the DSM-IV criteria for Major Depressive Episode. The patient must score at least 15 points on the MADRS and have a CGI-S score of 3 or more during this episode.

Mania and hypomania: by DSM-IV criteria.

Eligibility

Ages Eligible for Study:

18 Years to 70 Years

Genders Eligible for Study:

Both

Accepts Healthy Volunteers:

No

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Patients with bipolar disorder in major depressive episode according to DSM-IV

MADRS score of at least 20 points at screening and baseline

18-70 years of age

Unchanged dose of mood stabilising medication for at least six weeks prior to inclusion

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) during the current episode of depression

Patients who are unlikely to be reliable and compliant with study procedures

Patients who are not fluent in Norwegian

Contacts and Locations

Choosing to participate in a study is an important personal decision. Talk with your doctor and family members or friends about deciding to join a study.
To learn more about this study, you or your doctor may contact the study research staff using the Contacts provided below.
For general information, see Learn About Clinical Studies.

Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00464191